R50/53 Sad decision needs to be made...
Remember that sales tax and title/registration fees for a new car are probably going to amount to something close to the cost of an extended warranty.
I suspect that buying the warranty and keeping the MINI is actually the CHEAPEST way to go
I suspect that buying the warranty and keeping the MINI is actually the CHEAPEST way to go
Do not buy the PT!
I owned one for 3 years. The car was pristine and with about 26k miles when I wanted to sell it.
In over 3 months of trying to sell it I had only 3-4 calls and only 2 people looked at it. After a while I was willing to take almost any offer.
Ended up trading it in and losing a lot of dough.
I owned one for 3 years. The car was pristine and with about 26k miles when I wanted to sell it.
In over 3 months of trying to sell it I had only 3-4 calls and only 2 people looked at it. After a while I was willing to take almost any offer.
Ended up trading it in and losing a lot of dough.
Oh, that's rough... don't do it!
Its SOOOO disappointing driving another car after you've owned a MINI for a while. You'll definitely regret it.
If you really have to get a new car I'd broaden the choices you've mentioned.
PT - Had one in Vegas for a week... Steered like a TRUCK! That alone was enough for me to say I'd never buy one. Pseudo-retro cool factor & myriads or aftermarket parts won't make up for its shortcomings.
Sci-on: Don't know enough to comment. But looks are quirky & unique. The boxy car has the same appeal as the old VW "Thing" ...So fugly it grows on you.
Don't go Honda Civic - I got rid of a 99 before the MINI. The current Civics are technically dummed down, larger, and more poorly built/finished than 5 short years ago. Honda's living off of years of good rep, but not coming through with the goods.
Re: someone's comments about Suzuki... They are WAAAY off base.
I used to own a 91 Swift GT (1.3L, 100 hp/1700 lbs.). It handled very well - comparable, but not as well as a MINI. I drove it like a racecar day in and out. After 170,000 miles the engine was still SMOOTH and fuel-efficient. ...Hell, it was smoother than my MCS was new.
ALSO
I did all those miles in that lowly Suzuki on ONE timing belt! I only ever replaced consumable parts, oil & fuel. I'd probably still have it, save for a collision. I'd put the quality & reliability of the Swift GT up against anything from Toyota or Honda. ...And for the $
The Swift GT is the best bang for the buck I've ever owned. The closest I've come to the Swift performance/$ is the MINI Cooper. Fuel milage isn't as good, but performance, solidity of build, fun & style are all WAY better.
Keep the MINI if you can.
Its SOOOO disappointing driving another car after you've owned a MINI for a while. You'll definitely regret it.
If you really have to get a new car I'd broaden the choices you've mentioned.
PT - Had one in Vegas for a week... Steered like a TRUCK! That alone was enough for me to say I'd never buy one. Pseudo-retro cool factor & myriads or aftermarket parts won't make up for its shortcomings.
Sci-on: Don't know enough to comment. But looks are quirky & unique. The boxy car has the same appeal as the old VW "Thing" ...So fugly it grows on you.
Don't go Honda Civic - I got rid of a 99 before the MINI. The current Civics are technically dummed down, larger, and more poorly built/finished than 5 short years ago. Honda's living off of years of good rep, but not coming through with the goods.
Re: someone's comments about Suzuki... They are WAAAY off base.
I used to own a 91 Swift GT (1.3L, 100 hp/1700 lbs.). It handled very well - comparable, but not as well as a MINI. I drove it like a racecar day in and out. After 170,000 miles the engine was still SMOOTH and fuel-efficient. ...Hell, it was smoother than my MCS was new.
ALSO
I did all those miles in that lowly Suzuki on ONE timing belt! I only ever replaced consumable parts, oil & fuel. I'd probably still have it, save for a collision. I'd put the quality & reliability of the Swift GT up against anything from Toyota or Honda. ...And for the $
The Swift GT is the best bang for the buck I've ever owned. The closest I've come to the Swift performance/$ is the MINI Cooper. Fuel milage isn't as good, but performance, solidity of build, fun & style are all WAY better.
Keep the MINI if you can.
The cheapest car you will ever buy is the one you already own. As others have said, the tax on a new car would likely pay for any repairs that you will need and would certainly buy an extended warranty. It makes no sense to try to avoid a posible debt, by taking on a certain debt. All in all a MINI is no more expensive to maintain than many cars, and cheaper by far than many so-called economy cars. There is no timing belt to maintain for one thing. Sure service at a BMW dealership is usually more expensive, but once the car is out of warranty there is no need to take it to the dealership. I can't believe that any financial advisor would tell you that what you are contemplating is a good financial move. Now if you were going to sell the MINI to purchase a used car for less money than the MINI, that may make sense. But to go into debt for a longer period of time just to avoid some possible non-warranty repairs just doesn't sound reasonable.
You may need to talk to a financial advisor to determine the best move.
You may need to talk to a financial advisor to determine the best move.
A big THANK YOU to everyone for some really good advice. I'm officially going to look into the extended warranty. Trust me, actually getting rid of the MINI was a horrible thought - but, if it turned out to be a smart move I'd have to make (at least) one practical decision in life. :smile: I appreciate the varying views as they made me consider more than I had been. It's also good to get the opinions of people who actually own MINIs.
For the record, I love the PT Cruiser and enjoy driving my boyfriend's. Though, I can't quite get it to corner correctly.
Now my other problem, the town in New York we're moving to seems to have a gorgeous VR MINI w/ white roof, stripes and driving lights. I'm used to being the one and only.
But, it is sweeet.
Cheers!
For the record, I love the PT Cruiser and enjoy driving my boyfriend's. Though, I can't quite get it to corner correctly.
Now my other problem, the town in New York we're moving to seems to have a gorgeous VR MINI w/ white roof, stripes and driving lights. I'm used to being the one and only.
But, it is sweeet. Cheers!
Over-Enthusiastic Enthusiasm? Sounds like envy to me..
Originally Posted by minimc
Sci-on: Don't know enough to comment. But looks are quirky & unique. The boxy car has the same appeal as the old VW "Thing" ...So fugly it grows on you.
The Swift GT is the best bang for the buck I've ever owned. The closest I've come to the Swift performance/$ is the MINI Cooper. Fuel milage isn't as good, but performance, solidity of build, fun & style are all WAY better.
Keep the MINI if you can.
The Swift GT is the best bang for the buck I've ever owned. The closest I've come to the Swift performance/$ is the MINI Cooper. Fuel milage isn't as good, but performance, solidity of build, fun & style are all WAY better.
Keep the MINI if you can.
But a Scion runs a distant second to a VW Thing. I personally don't think it's even close. Gimme a VW thing, ditch the doors, fold down the windshield, add an Iron Cross or two to the body (or doors, if they're on) Yeah! Besides, an H2 is more fugly than a VW or Suzuki. Like a big bloated tick on the road. If my car was that ugly, I wouldn't pick Lemon Yellow for a color, either..but plenty of drivers do.
That car just screams "Fear my buying power!" when I see it. It also screams "Look at me!", but then I notice they're ON THE CELL PHONE!
Aargghh!
cheers,
Matthew Z.
P.S. Keep the MINI. Odds are good it will outlast the boyfriend, as favorites go..
there's a lady on the second floor at MINI OF PEABODY that can walk you through many different options available through them,don't remember her name.Call first and get a general idea before making the drive. Jock
Originally Posted by nightowl
I'm in central MA, dealer's in Peabody.... Hartford is actually an hour and a half too (truly centrally located). In NY - Poughkeepsie, dealer's in Darien, CT... we're almost two hours from the actual city. A car is a must.... I like the idea of low insurence tho' on the Cruiser.
And just for the general leasing comments - I drive waaay too much for that. About 20-25k a year. And thanks to everyone for their advice and opinions. I'm going to look into the refinancing option and would love to find an extended warranty (anybody have a name/number?
).
And just for the general leasing comments - I drive waaay too much for that. About 20-25k a year. And thanks to everyone for their advice and opinions. I'm going to look into the refinancing option and would love to find an extended warranty (anybody have a name/number?
).
[QUOTE=nightowl]A big THANK YOU to everyone for some really good advice. I'm officially going to look into the extended warranty. Trust me, actually getting rid of the MINI was a horrible thought - but, if it turned out to be a smart move I'd have to make (at least) one practical decision in life. :smile: I appreciate the varying views as they made me consider more than I had been. It's also good to get the opinions of people who actually own MINIs.
Originally Posted by nightowl
A big THANK YOU to everyone for some really good advice. I'm officially going to look into the extended warranty. Trust me, actually getting rid of the MINI was a horrible thought - but, if it turned out to be a smart move I'd have to make (at least) one practical decision in life. :smile: I appreciate the varying views as they made me consider more than I had been. It's also good to get the opinions of people who actually own MINIs.
Cheers!
Cheers!

Here's the math:
I've made some assumptions that may be incorrect, but you'll follow the math I've done here.
Today: Let's pretend you have payments of $400/month on your MINI. That's $12K until it is paid for. At a rate of 25K miles per year, you will have a MINI with 125K miles on it at 5 years old, but it will be paid for. With a purchase of an extended warrenty (and I want to say mine was for around $2K), you'll be able to get close to pay-off under warrenty.
If you trade and buy a new car (your plan of a cheaper car with a warrenty):
If you pay $250/month, in 2.5 years you have spent $7.5K and have a 2.5 year old car with 50K miles on it. This car will be out of its warrenty within this 2.5 years, so you'll be paying for repairs on it by this point.
In the short run (the next 2.5 years): keeping the MINI will cost you about $4K more than a new car --and this is not figuring a re-fi on the car which could spread the remaining payments out over 4 years and may bring the actual costs down to the same level.
HOWEVER, if you look at the end of 5 years with either car, you will have had 3 years of no car payments with the MINI, and it is generally accepted that repairs on a car never cost as much as payments on a new car (until a car gets rather old and then its more a matter that the car isn't worth the repair costs), so your bills will be lower. However, at the end of 5 years with this new car you are thinking about, you will have been paying for it the whole time with little to no real relief in expenses.
And this doesn't go into what the car will be worth in 5 years versus another car that isn't holding its resale like the MINI.
The decision really is, if you want to buy a car every 3 years, never pay one off and with your mileage issues ---you'll always be upside down.
So, there --- here's hoping you keep the MINI you love.
Hugs,
PB
I was considering trading in my 03 Cooper at one time to. Although I would have traded for an 05. But I thought why bother? I love this car and would like to keep it around for awhile. Use it as a daily driver until it's paid off then go from there. Anyhow I was putting on like 1,500 miles a week when I decided to just buy an extended warranty. I got one from 1 Source Auto Warranty on the internet. For 4years or 100,000 miles whichever is first ran me about $1,800 (they also do payment plans). Now I relocated my job closer to home and am not putting on so many miles, but I am at nearly 47,000 miles and the warranty will certainly help out if something goes wrong. My advice... Keep the MINI get an extended warranty. Any parts that have already been replaced on your car if they fail they are under a seperate warranty, not sure on the details but I think its 2 years.
Originally Posted by BabsWife
Just to confirm everyone's theories around here.....
Here's the math:
I've made some assumptions that may be incorrect, but you'll follow the math I've done here.
Today: Let's pretend you have payments of $400/month on your MINI. That's $12K until it is paid for. At a rate of 25K miles per year, you will have a MINI with 125K miles on it at 5 years old, but it will be paid for. With a purchase of an extended warrenty (and I want to say mine was for around $2K), you'll be able to get close to pay-off under warrenty.
So, there --- here's hoping you keep the MINI you love.
Hugs,
PB
Here's the math:
I've made some assumptions that may be incorrect, but you'll follow the math I've done here.
Today: Let's pretend you have payments of $400/month on your MINI. That's $12K until it is paid for. At a rate of 25K miles per year, you will have a MINI with 125K miles on it at 5 years old, but it will be paid for. With a purchase of an extended warrenty (and I want to say mine was for around $2K), you'll be able to get close to pay-off under warrenty.
So, there --- here's hoping you keep the MINI you love.
Hugs,
PB
Hope this helps a few others as well.
Ditto.
Originally Posted by minimc
I used to own a 91 Swift GT (1.3L, 100 hp/1700 lbs.). It handled very well - comparable, but not as well as a MINI. I drove it like a racecar day in and out. After 170,000 miles the engine was still SMOOTH and fuel-efficient. ...Hell, it was smoother than my MCS was new.
The Swift GT is the best bang for the buck I've ever owned. The closest I've come to the Swift performance/$ is the MINI Cooper. Fuel milage isn't as good, but performance, solidity of build, fun & style are all WAY better.
Keep the MINI if you can.
The Swift GT is the best bang for the buck I've ever owned. The closest I've come to the Swift performance/$ is the MINI Cooper. Fuel milage isn't as good, but performance, solidity of build, fun & style are all WAY better.
Keep the MINI if you can.
Now onto your situation. Definitely keep the MINI if at all possible.Velvet Red is a great color! You will end up spending more money buying something else and you won't have half the car of your MINI. Scions are flavor of the month (if I had to I would go for the TC over the xA or xB) but, I couldn't even imagine being condemned to driving a PT!
I own an absolutely mint 2001 Patriot Blue PTC LE with 10K miles in CT. Sure would like to sell it for a deposit on a MCS. The PTC was nice, but doesn't have the fun factor of the MC. Having test drove a MCS this past weekend, I gotta sell the PTC...
Rich
Rich
I know it's been said already, but the CHEAPESTcar is the one you own. If you trade out, you'll more than likely be upsidedown. That, plus TTL of a new car (even if you can find one in the 13k range) will still put you near 20K. (And a new total debt of around 20-22K versus the 12K or so you owe now).
If your main reason for changing is to avoid repairs that aren't under warranty, maybe you should consider leasing. Then that shouldn't be an issue.
Good luck in whatever you decide.
If your main reason for changing is to avoid repairs that aren't under warranty, maybe you should consider leasing. Then that shouldn't be an issue.
Good luck in whatever you decide.
Hafta Agree!
One of the BEST ways to throw money away is to buy new cars often. Not only are you eating the depreciation of your MINI (which, compared to other cars isn't a lot), you have to consider some other things. Payments on a new car, over the course of a year, will easily outpace whatever repairs you might encounter.
Also, don't forget taxes! I'm sure that registering a new car in NY can't be cheap. Anybody know the sales tax in NY? Here in Cali, it's 8.25%!
Besides, how bad can owning the MINI really be? There are plenty of clubs you can join; there's so much support out there, much more than with Scion (which, to me is a Kids' car).
Economically, if you buy a new car--any new car--every two or three years, it's like "buying the barrel of whiskey for the same price as the cow you can't afford" (Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary).
Here's one final thought. If you buy a Prius or Honda Accord CIVIC Hybrid, you'll get a $2000 tax credit on your income tax. That MIGHT make your decision to replace the MINI a more viable one.
Of course, I offer this opinion with the humblest of intentions.
I say, wait two extra weeks to get a haircut each time, stop going to Starbucks, keep the MINI, and keep Motoring!
Also, don't forget taxes! I'm sure that registering a new car in NY can't be cheap. Anybody know the sales tax in NY? Here in Cali, it's 8.25%!
Besides, how bad can owning the MINI really be? There are plenty of clubs you can join; there's so much support out there, much more than with Scion (which, to me is a Kids' car).
Economically, if you buy a new car--any new car--every two or three years, it's like "buying the barrel of whiskey for the same price as the cow you can't afford" (Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary).
Here's one final thought. If you buy a Prius or Honda Accord CIVIC Hybrid, you'll get a $2000 tax credit on your income tax. That MIGHT make your decision to replace the MINI a more viable one.
Of course, I offer this opinion with the humblest of intentions.
I say, wait two extra weeks to get a haircut each time, stop going to Starbucks, keep the MINI, and keep Motoring!
Originally Posted by JPit
I don't understand the economics of your decision. You must be close to paying off the MINI if the warranty is about to expire. You believe that buying a new car is going to be less expensive than possible post-warranty car repairs? Even if you still have a couple of years left on your payments you could get a new loan that would drop your payments a considerable amount. I think there is probably more going on here that we would need to know to offer any advice.
Originally Posted by Johnny L
One of the BEST ways to throw money away is to buy new cars often. Not only are you eating the depreciation of your MINI (which, compared to other cars isn't a lot), you have to consider some other things. Payments on a new car, over the course of a year, will easily outpace whatever repairs you might encounter.
I would LOVE to do that... but I cant.. cuz I dont have a house... nothing is set... so I will have to make my MINI last as long as I can...
6th Gear

Joined: Oct 2003
Posts: 1,627
Likes: 1
From: Neenah, WI
Originally Posted by nightowl
My two options for a new car are the PT Cruiser (love it, bf has one, love his)
I'm going to go to a corner and cry now.
And my bf thinks me no longer having one will end my "over-enthusiastic enthusiasm" - he is soooo wrong.
I'm going to go to a corner and cry now.
And my bf thinks me no longer having one will end my "over-enthusiastic enthusiasm" - he is soooo wrong.

Others have done a good job explaining why it's not a good idea financially to buy a new car, so I'll just say this: after driving your MINI for 38,000 miles, you're in for a rude surprise if you go and test drive those Scions. The gearshifts are incredibly imprecise and cheap-feeling, and the handling is downright comical compared to the MINI. The xB is definitely superior to the xA in terms of quality and praticality, but both are far below the MINI in every respect other than fuel economy.
One part of your argument that definitely has merit is distance to the dealer. It's something to consider, but I don't think it's worth dumping the MINI for.
Seriously, go drive those other cars. I did, when the faulty 5-speed transmission in my Cooper failed at 15,000 miles, and guess what I'm driving now? (Hint: it's chili red with leatherette interior).
One part of your argument that definitely has merit is distance to the dealer. It's something to consider, but I don't think it's worth dumping the MINI for.
Seriously, go drive those other cars. I did, when the faulty 5-speed transmission in my Cooper failed at 15,000 miles, and guess what I'm driving now? (Hint: it's chili red with leatherette interior).
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